Peacock Luggage, a book of poems by Moniza Alvi and Peter Daniels, was published after the two poets jointly won the
Poetry Business Prize in 1991, in Alvi's case for "Presents from my Aunts in Pakistan". That poem and "An Unknown Girl" have featured on England's
GCSE exam syllabus for young teenagers. Since then, Moniza Alvi has written over half a dozen poetry collections. Her debut poetry collection,
The Country at My Shoulder (1993), which was shortlisted for the
T. S. Eliot Prize 1993, led to her being selected for the
Poetry Society's
New Generation Poets promotion in 1994. She also published a series of short stories,
How the Stone Found its Voice (2005), inspired by
Kipling's
Just So Stories. In 2002, she received a
Cholmondeley Award for her poetry. In 2003 a selection of her poetry was published in a bilingual Dutch and English edition. A selection from her earlier books,
Split World: Poems 1990–2005, was published alongside
Europa in 2008. Both
Europa and her new collection
At the Time of Partition, published in 2013, were then shortlisted for the T. S. Eliot Prize in their respective years. On 16 January 2014, Alvi participated in the
BBC Radio 3 series
The Essay – Letters to a Young Poet. Taking
Rainer Maria Rilke's classic text,
Letters to a Young Poet as their inspiration, leading poets wrote a letter to a protégé. ==Selected works==